Margin Loan Calculator 2026 | Interest Cost & Margin Call Analyzer

Underwrite your leveraged portfolio with our 2026 margin analyzer. Estimate daily interest accrual, compare broker rates, and audit your maintenance margin risk. Calculate your exact liquidation trigger price, your Regulation T (Reg T) safety cushion, and the hurdle rate required to break even on the cost of your margin debt.

Daily, monthly, annual interest 360 vs 365 accrual basis Broker comparison savings Maintenance margin + call trigger Break-even return hurdle PDF + WhatsApp sharing
1Loan Cost Inputs
Borrowed amount on margin.
Total securities value in the account.
Holding period for interest estimate.
Selected broker or benchmark rate.
Used for daily interest accrual.
Starting equity requirement.
Broker maintenance threshold.
Your personal safety buffer above maintenance.
2Broker Comparison Layer
Broker A
Broker B
Broker C
Broker D
3Yield & Return Hurdle
Cash yield before financing cost.
Price return plus income assumption.
Used to estimate margin-call price.
Scenario downside test.
This workbench combines borrowing cost, broker comparison, maintenance-margin risk, downside tolerance, and return hurdle math in one place for decision support.
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Enter your margin balance, account value, broker rates, and return assumptions to see cost, call risk, safety buffer, and the best broker choice in one view.

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How Our Margin Underwriting Engine Models Your Portfolio Risk

The analyzer runs four independent calculation layers simultaneously — borrowing cost, broker comparison, margin-call risk, and return hurdle — then delivers a color-coded safety verdict, six KPI metrics, a cost-vs-return chart, and a full broker and risk summary table.

1
Portfolio Profile & Debt-to-Equity Parameters
Input your margin loan balance, total portfolio market value, borrowing period in days, your broker’s annual margin rate, and the accrual basis (360 or 365 days). The analyzer calculates daily, period, and annualized interest cost from these four numbers using the exact same formula brokers use to charge your account.
2
Regulation T (Reg T) & House Maintenance Thresholds
Enter your account’s initial margin percentage (FINRA minimum is 50% for most equities), the broker’s maintenance margin threshold (typically 25–30%), and your personal minimum equity buffer — the cushion you want to keep above the maintenance level before you act. These three inputs define the precise price at which a margin call would be triggered.
3
Broker Interest Arbitrage & Rate Comparison
Enter the name and annual margin rate for up to four brokers. The analyzer calculates the holding cost for your exact loan balance and period under each broker rate, identifies the cheapest option, and shows how much you save annually by switching from your current rate to the lowest available rate — quantifying the real dollar cost of broker loyalty.
4
Hurdle Rate Modeling: Yield & Asset Return Assumptions
Input your portfolio’s dividend or cash yield, your expected annual total return, current asset price, and a portfolio stress-drop percentage for downside scenario testing. The return inputs power two critical outputs: the break-even return (the exact annual return needed to cover margin interest), and the stress scenario showing whether a volatility spike would trigger a margin call before you can respond.
5
The Risk Assessment: Liquidation Price & Safety Cushion
Click Analyze Margin Risk to generate a color-coded Decision Verdict (safe buffer, warning, or danger), six KPI outputs (daily interest, holding cost, cheapest broker, margin-call price, safety buffer, break-even return), a strategy advice alert, a Cost vs Return vs Cushion bar chart, and a full Broker and Risk Summary table with business meaning for every metric.
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Margin Loans — Complete Educational Guide

Everything you need to understand margin borrowing before you use it — from the mechanics of how interest accrues to the specific math behind leverage amplification, margin calls, break-even analysis, and tax treatment. Read this before placing your first leveraged trade.

What Is a Margin Loan?

A margin loan is a line of credit extended by your broker, secured by the securities already held in your brokerage account. Unlike a personal loan or mortgage, a margin loan has no fixed repayment schedule — you can hold the balance as long as your portfolio maintains the required equity ratio. The borrowed funds can be used to purchase additional securities (amplifying exposure) or withdrawn as cash for other purposes.

The securities in your account serve as collateral. If the value of that collateral falls below a defined threshold — the maintenance margin requirement — the broker issues a margin call demanding that you restore equity immediately, or they liquidate positions on your behalf.

Margin accounts are not default accounts. You must specifically apply for and be approved for margin borrowing — brokers assess your net worth, investment experience, and income before granting access.
Margin vs. Other Forms of Borrowing
FeatureMargin LoanPersonal LoanHELOC
CollateralSecurities portfolioNone (unsecured)Home equity
Repayment ScheduleNone — hold indefinitelyFixed monthly paymentsDraw period then repayment
Interest Rate (2026)6–10% typical10–24%7–10%
Rate TypeVariable (floats with SOFR)Usually fixedUsually variable
Forced Liquidation RiskYes — margin callNoNo (unless in default)
Interest Deductible?Yes (investment income only)NoYes (home improvement use)
Approval SpeedInstant (once approved)Days to weeksWeeks
Key Margin Terminology
Margin Balance
The total amount you have borrowed from your broker. This is what you pay interest on — not the total portfolio value.
Account Equity
Market Value of Securities − Margin Loan Balance. This is what you actually own — the portion not borrowed. Margin calls are triggered when equity falls too low.
Equity Ratio
Account Equity ÷ Market Value × 100. Expressed as a percentage — compared against initial and maintenance margin thresholds to determine call risk.
Initial Margin (Reg T)
The minimum equity required to open a new leveraged position. Federal minimum is 50% — meaning you must own at least 50 cents for every $1 of stock purchased on margin.
Maintenance Margin
The minimum equity ratio required to keep an existing leveraged position open. FINRA minimum is 25%; most brokers enforce 30–40% house requirements.
House Requirement
A broker’s internal maintenance margin threshold — always at or above the FINRA 25% minimum. Volatile or concentrated securities may have special house requirements of 50–100%.
Buying Power
The total value of securities you can purchase in a margin account. Generally 2× your cash or equity for standard Reg T accounts (50% initial margin = 2:1 leverage).
Margin Call
A demand from your broker to deposit additional funds or securities — or reduce the margin loan balance — because equity has fallen below the maintenance margin requirement.
Fed Call
A specific margin call issued when a new purchase violates Regulation T’s 50% initial margin requirement. Must be met within 5 business days — failure results in forced liquidation of the position.
Portfolio Margin
An advanced margin methodology available to accounts with $100,000+ equity. Uses risk-based modeling of the entire portfolio instead of position-by-position Reg T rules — often allowing greater leverage for hedged strategies.
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Margin Trading Vocabulary: Equity, Leverage, and Cushions

The analyzer outputs 12 distinct metrics in the results table. Here is exactly what each one measures, the formula behind it, and how to interpret a warning versus a healthy result.

Metric Formula / Source Healthy Signal Warning Signal
Daily Interest CostLoan Balance × (Annual Rate ÷ Accrual Basis)Below $50/day on a $100K loan at reasonable ratesAbove $75/day — rate is high or balance is overleveraged
Holding Period CostDaily Interest × Days HeldUnder 2% of portfolio value for the holding periodAbove 3% — borrowing cost significantly compresses net return
Annual Interest CostLoan Balance × Annual RateLoan rate below expected portfolio return by ≥3%Rate approaches or exceeds expected return — negative spread
Equity Ratio(Market Value − Loan Balance) ÷ Market ValueAbove 50% — leverage is moderate and manageableBelow 35% — approaching maintenance margin with little buffer
Maintenance Margin BufferEquity Ratio − Maintenance Margin %Buffer above 20 percentage pointsUnder 10 pp — one moderate correction could trigger a call
Margin-Call PriceLoan Balance ÷ (1 − Maintenance Margin %)More than 25% below current priceWithin 15% of current price — high call risk in normal volatility
Safety Buffer (Dollars)Market Value − (Loan Balance ÷ (1 − Maintenance Margin %))Buffer covers 2+ standard deviations of portfolio volatilityBuffer less than one expected drawdown — insufficient cushion
Cheapest Broker Saving(Your Rate − Lowest Broker Rate) × Loan BalanceSavings under $500/year — switching cost may not justify changeOver $1,500/year — compelling case to switch brokers immediately
Break-Even ReturnAnnual Interest ÷ Portfolio Market Value × 100Break-even below 4% — achievable in most market environmentsBreak-even above 8% — requires strong bull market to justify leverage
Net SpreadExpected Return − Break-Even ReturnPositive spread above 3% — leverage is adding valueNegative spread — you are paying more in interest than your portfolio is earning
Stress-Drop Margin Call RiskPost-stress equity ratio vs. maintenance marginPortfolio survives stress drop with buffer intactStress drop triggers margin call — position is vulnerable to volatility
Dividend Yield vs. RatePortfolio Yield % − Annual Margin Rate %Positive — dividends partially or fully offset borrowing costNegative — interest exceeds dividend income, relying entirely on price appreciation

⚡ The Net Spread and Safety Buffer are the two most actionable metrics. A positive net spread means leverage is mathematically adding return above its cost. A thin safety buffer means a single bad day in the market could trigger an involuntary margin call with no time to respond.

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Active Trader Scenarios: Bull Market Boost vs. Bear Market Survival

Three common investor situations where the analyzer’s four calculation layers produce a different risk picture than looking at the interest rate alone.

📖The Situation

An investor holds $180,000 of a diversified S&P 500 ETF with a 1.6% dividend yield and borrows $80,000 on margin at 8.75% to amplify exposure. The portfolio has historically returned 10–12% annually. Maintenance margin is 30%. The investor’s personal risk buffer is set at 10% above maintenance. They are testing whether the leverage is mathematically justified.

The key question: With a 1.6% dividend yield and 8.75% margin rate, the investor is paying 7.15% net per year in interest above income. The expected 11% return needs to outpace a 4.86% break-even return — the spread is positive, but a 20% market correction would compress the buffer dangerously close to the margin-call price.
Daily Interest
$19.18
$80K at 8.75% / 365
90-Day Cost
$1,726
3-month holding
Equity Ratio
55.6%
($180K−$80K)÷$180K
Margin-Call Price
~$65.71
At $100 ETF price
Break-Even Return
4.86%
Cost ÷ portfolio value
Net Spread
+6.14%
11% return − 4.86%
Verdict — Safe Buffer, Positive Spread: The break-even is achievable and the equity ratio is above maintenance. However, a 34%+ price drop would trigger the margin call. The stress-test layer flags this as a meaningful tail risk for a leveraged index position.
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Pro Trader Tips: Managing Leverage Without Getting Liquidated

Eight risk-management principles that experienced margin borrowers apply — and how to model each one using this analyzer’s four calculation layers.

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Never Borrow More Than 30% of Portfolio Value
Safe

Keeping the margin loan below 30% of portfolio market value maintains an equity ratio above 70% — providing substantial buffer above any broker’s maintenance margin requirement (typically 25–30%). At this leverage level, a portfolio would need to drop more than 57% before a margin call is triggered, giving you time to make deliberate decisions rather than react under forced liquidation.

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The Margin-Call Price Is a Hard Floor — Not an Estimate
Risk

The margin-call price calculated by this analyzer is the exact mathematical trigger. Brokers are legally permitted to liquidate positions without notice at or below this price — and they routinely do so in fast-moving markets. In practice, set your personal risk limit buffer 10–15 percentage points above the maintenance margin threshold so your warning system fires before the broker’s automated system does.

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Compare Brokers by Total Dollar Cost — Not Just Rate
Pro

A 1% difference in margin rates sounds small. On a $500,000 margin balance, it is $5,000/year — recurring, compounding, and not offset by any additional service. Use the Broker Comparison Layer to enter at least two competing rates every time you review your margin position. Brokers with the lowest margin rates (Interactive Brokers and Webull as of 2026) often provide inferior execution tools — model the full trade-off including platform fees and order routing quality.

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Accrual Basis Affects Your True Daily Cost
Warning

Brokers use either 360-day or 365-day accrual basis for daily interest calculations. A 360-day basis produces a slightly higher effective daily rate than 365 at the same stated annual rate. For large balances over multi-month periods, the difference can amount to hundreds of dollars. Always confirm the accrual basis in your broker’s margin agreement and select the matching option in the Accrual Basis field for accurate period cost calculations.

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The Break-Even Return Must Account for Tax Drag
Safe

This analyzer calculates a pre-tax break-even return. In taxable accounts, your realized gains are subject to capital gains tax — reducing the after-tax return that needs to exceed your break-even. A 4.86% break-even return at a 15% long-term capital gains rate requires an 5.72% pre-tax return to break even on an after-tax basis. Always gross up the break-even return by your marginal capital gains rate before deciding if the leverage is justified.

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Dividend Yield Offsets Cost — But Never Enough on Its Own
Risk

A 3% dividend yield against an 8.5% margin rate still leaves a 5.5% annual interest deficit that must be covered by price appreciation. Leverage on a high-dividend stock does not become “self-funding” unless the yield equals or exceeds the margin rate — which is extremely rare without taking on significant credit or sector risk. Enter your portfolio yield accurately to see the true net cost after income offset in the analyzer’s net spread calculation.

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Run the Stress Drop Test at Your Portfolio’s True Volatility
Pro

The portfolio volatility stress drop field is a downside scenario tool — not an average. Enter the maximum realistic single-month or single-quarter drawdown your portfolio type has historically experienced. For S&P 500 index funds, a 20–25% stress drop is historically appropriate (2020 COVID crash: −34%, 2022: −25%). For single tech stocks, 35–50% is not extreme. If the stress test triggers a margin call at any historically plausible drop, your leverage is too high for the asset’s volatility profile.

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Margin Interest Is Deductible — But Only Against Investment Income
Warning

Under IRS Publication 550, margin interest paid on loans used to purchase taxable investments is deductible as investment interest expense on Form 4952 — but only to the extent of your net investment income for the year. You cannot use margin interest to create a tax loss against ordinary income. Unused deductions can be carried forward to future years. This deductibility partially offsets the true cost of borrowing — the net after-tax margin rate equals rate × (1 − marginal investment income tax rate).

FAQs: Forced Liquidations, House Calls & Broker Rates

Answers to the most common questions from retail investors and traders about margin interest calculation, maintenance margin, margin calls, break-even returns, and broker rate comparisons.

How is margin interest calculated and when does it accrue?
Margin interest accrues daily on the outstanding loan balance, using the formula: Daily Interest = Loan Balance × (Annual Rate ÷ Accrual Basis). The accrual basis is either 360 or 365 depending on your broker’s agreement. Most brokers charge interest monthly or on a specific statement date by adding the accrued daily charges. Critically, interest accrues on weekends and holidays even if markets are closed — there is no pause in the interest clock. On a $100,000 loan at 9%, daily interest is $24.66 (365 basis) or $25.00 (360 basis) — roughly $750 per month regardless of what the market does.
What is maintenance margin and how does it differ from initial margin?
Initial margin is the minimum equity required to open a leveraged position. FINRA Regulation T sets the federal minimum at 50% for most equity securities — meaning you must put up at least $1 for every $2 of stock purchased. Maintenance margin is the minimum equity required to keep the position open after it is established. FINRA sets the federal minimum at 25%, but most brokers impose higher house requirements of 30–40% for volatile stocks. If your equity falls below the maintenance level due to market losses, a margin call is issued immediately — regardless of whether you entered the position at the higher initial margin level.
What exactly triggers a margin call and what happens if I ignore it?
A margin call is triggered when your account equity falls below the broker’s maintenance margin threshold. Your equity equals market value minus loan balance — when market value drops enough that this ratio falls below the maintenance percentage, the broker issues a call to restore equity above the threshold. If you ignore a margin call, the broker has the legal right — and the standard practice — to liquidate positions in your account without your consent to bring equity back above maintenance. They choose which securities to sell, often at the worst possible prices during volatile markets. There is no legal obligation for brokers to give you advance notice or time to respond — many liquidations happen automatically and intraday.
How is the margin-call trigger price calculated?
The margin-call trigger price is calculated as: Loan Balance ÷ (1 − Maintenance Margin %). This is the portfolio value at which equity equals exactly the maintenance margin requirement. For example, with a $100,000 loan and 30% maintenance margin: $100,000 ÷ 0.70 = $142,857 portfolio value. If your portfolio has a single stock at $200 and falls to $142.86 per share on a proportional basis, you receive a margin call. The analyzer computes this trigger price and compares it to current price — expressing the gap as the percentage drop required to trigger the call, which is the most actionable metric for assessing call risk.
What is the break-even return on margin borrowing?
The break-even return is the minimum annual portfolio return needed to cover the full cost of margin borrowing. It is calculated as: Annual Interest Cost ÷ Portfolio Market Value × 100. A $100,000 loan at 9% on a $200,000 portfolio creates annual interest of $9,000 — a break-even return of 4.5%. If the portfolio earns exactly 4.5%, margin has neither helped nor hurt (ignoring tax effects). Below 4.5%, leverage has destroyed value. Above 4.5%, leverage has amplified returns. The net spread — expected return minus break-even return — is the single clearest indicator of whether margin use is financially rational.
How do I compare margin rates across brokers fairly?
To compare brokers fairly, you need to account for three factors: (1) Tiered rate structures — most brokers charge higher rates on smaller loan balances and lower rates on larger ones. Always get the rate for your specific balance tier, not the headline advertised rate. (2) Accrual basis — confirm whether each broker uses 360 or 365 days, as this affects the effective daily cost. (3) Platform fees — a broker with a 1% lower margin rate but $30/month platform fee may not actually be cheaper at small loan sizes. Enter each broker’s actual rate for your balance tier in the Broker Comparison Layer. The analyzer calculates the exact dollar cost difference for your specific balance and holding period — eliminating all ambiguity.
What is the safety buffer and how much should I maintain?
The safety buffer is the dollar gap between your current portfolio value and the margin-call trigger price — essentially, how much your portfolio can fall in dollar terms before a margin call is issued. A larger buffer gives you more time to respond, deposit funds, or reduce leverage voluntarily before the broker acts. Recommended buffer by position type: Diversified index ETFs: maintain enough buffer to absorb a 25–30% drop. Sector ETFs: 35–40%. Individual large-cap stocks: 40–50%. Small-cap or high-volatility stocks: 50%+. Enter your personal minimum equity buffer percentage in the Max Risk Limit field — the analyzer flags immediately when your actual buffer falls below this threshold.
Is margin interest tax-deductible on investment accounts?
Yes, with important limitations. Under IRS Publication 550 and Form 4952, investment interest expense — which includes margin interest paid on loans used to purchase taxable securities — is deductible against net investment income. Net investment income includes taxable dividends, interest income, and short-term capital gains, but specifically excludes qualified dividends and long-term capital gains unless you make a special election to include them (at the cost of losing their preferential tax rate). The deduction is limited to your net investment income for the year. Unused investment interest expense carries forward indefinitely. Margin interest used to purchase tax-exempt bonds or inside retirement accounts (IRA, 401k) is not deductible.
What is the difference between Regulation T margin and portfolio margin?
Regulation T (Reg T) margin is the standard margin account type for US retail investors, governed by FINRA and the Federal Reserve. It requires 50% initial margin and typically 25–30% maintenance margin on individual securities. It applies the same margin requirement to each position independently. Portfolio margin is available to qualifying accounts (generally $100,000+ equity) and uses a risk-based methodology that considers the entire portfolio’s net exposure — including hedges, options, and correlated positions. Portfolio margin can significantly lower margin requirements for hedged strategies (e.g., long stock + protective put), allowing more efficient use of capital. However, it also means leverage can increase dramatically in ways that are not immediately obvious. This analyzer models Reg T margin mechanics; for portfolio margin, the margin-call calculation methodology is more complex.
How does volatility affect the real risk of a margin position?
Volatility amplifies margin call risk in two ways. (1) Magnitude: Higher volatility means the portfolio can move from a comfortable buffer to a margin call in a single trading day — before you can act. A stock with 40% annualized volatility has a daily standard deviation of approximately 2.5% (40% ÷ √252). A 3-standard-deviation day — statistically possible once every 741 trading days — means a single-day drop of 7.5%. If your buffer is only 8% above the maintenance margin, one such day triggers a call. (2) Correlation collapse: In market stress events, diversification benefits disappear as correlations spike toward 1.0. A “diversified” portfolio that appears to have low volatility in normal markets can drop 15–20% in a single week during a crisis. Always use the maximum realistic stress scenario — not average volatility — in the stress-drop test field.
Can I use a margin loan for purposes other than buying more securities?
Yes — once a margin account has borrowing capacity, the cash can be used for any purpose: home improvements, short-term business expenses, tax payments, or real estate deposits. However, there are critical risks to using margin for non-investment purposes. (1) The loan remains secured by your securities — if the market drops, you face a margin call regardless of whether the borrowed money was used for investments. (2) Interest deductibility disappears — margin interest is only tax-deductible when the proceeds are used for taxable investment purposes (IRS Publication 550). Using margin for personal expenses or a car purchase means the interest is not deductible. (3) The risk-return trade-off changes entirely — you now have market risk on your portfolio plus an obligation to repay regardless of market performance, with no offsetting investment return from the deployed capital.
What is the difference between margin borrowing and a securities-backed line of credit?
Both use securities as collateral, but they serve different purposes and have different mechanics. Margin accounts are brokerage accounts where the loan is used within the same account to purchase additional securities, amplifying leverage. Margin calls are automatic and positions can be liquidated immediately. Securities-Backed Lines of Credit (SBLOCs) are separate loan products offered by banks and some brokerages (e.g., Schwab Pledged Asset Line) where your securities are pledged as collateral but you can use the proceeds externally — for real estate, business needs, or large purchases. SBLOCs typically have lower rates than margin and are not governed by Reg T. However, they also carry call risk if portfolio value drops below a collateral threshold. SBLOCs are generally more appropriate for short-term liquidity needs; margin accounts for leveraged investing strategies.
How do brokers set their margin rates and what determines the rate I am charged?
Broker margin rates are set based on a spread above a benchmark — typically the Secured Overnight Financing Rate (SOFR) or the Federal Funds Rate — plus a markup that varies by broker and loan size. Key factors that determine your rate: (1) Loan balance tier — larger balances get lower rates. Interactive Brokers, for example, offers significantly lower rates at $1M+ versus $25,000. (2) Account type — some brokers offer preferred rates to options traders, active traders, or premium subscribers. (3) Negotiation — institutional investors and active traders at full-service brokers frequently negotiate margin rates below the standard schedule. (4) Market conditions — as benchmark rates change, margin rates adjust accordingly, though broker spreads remain relatively stable. Always compare rates at your specific balance tier, not the headline advertised minimum.
What happens to my margin loan when the market closes for a holiday or weekend?
Interest continues to accrue on weekends, federal holidays, and market closures — the margin clock never pauses. Your account’s equity value is based on the last available market price (close price of the most recent trading day), and brokers monitor this value using those prices. This creates a gap risk: if a company announces bad news Friday after market close, the stock may open Monday significantly lower — and your broker may have issued a margin call based on the Monday open price before you even have time to review your account. Experienced margin investors keep the safety buffer large enough that even a 10–15% gap overnight or over a weekend does not trigger a call. The stress-drop test field in this analyzer is designed specifically for modeling this overnight and weekend gap risk.
How does margin borrowing amplify both gains and losses — with a concrete example?
Leverage amplifies percentage returns on your own equity — both positive and negative. Example: You invest $100,000 of your own money and borrow $100,000 on margin to buy $200,000 of an ETF. The ETF rises 20%. Your portfolio is worth $240,000. After repaying the $100,000 loan plus $9,000 interest, you have $131,000 — a 31% return on your $100,000 of equity instead of the 20% you’d have earned unleveraged. Now the downside: the ETF drops 20%. Portfolio is $160,000. After repaying $100,000 + $9,000 interest, you have $51,000 — a 49% loss on your equity from a 20% market drop. The leverage ratio determines how dramatically the losses accelerate as the market falls — and the margin-call mechanism can force you to lock in those losses at the worst possible time.
Should I use margin in a rising rate environment?
Rising interest rates create a double headwind for margin borrowers: (1) The borrowing cost increases directly — margin rates float with benchmark rates, so a 100 basis point Fed rate increase translates roughly to a 100 basis point increase in your margin rate, raising the break-even return required to justify leverage. (2) Rising rates compress equity valuations — higher discount rates reduce the present value of future earnings, pushing stock prices lower and compressing the safety buffer simultaneously. This means both the cost of borrowing rises and the collateral value falls at the same time — the worst possible combination for margin accounts. The 2022 environment illustrated this clearly: the S&P 500 fell 25% while margin rates jumped from approximately 4% to 9–10%, squeezing leveraged investors from both directions. In a rising-rate environment, run the break-even return analysis at the projected peak rate, not the current rate.
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SEC/FINRA Compliance, Editorial Transparency & Authority Sources

This section documents the legal scope of this tool, how every calculation was derived, what data is and is not collected, and links to the primary government and regulatory sources that govern margin lending and investment interest in the United States.

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Legal Disclaimer

This Margin Borrowing Cost, Safety Buffer & Broker Comparison Analyzer is provided strictly for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute investment advice, financial advice, brokerage advice, legal advice, or a recommendation to use margin borrowing in any capacity.

Not a substitute for your broker’s margin agreement. Your actual margin interest rate, maintenance margin requirement, house excess rules, and call procedures are governed exclusively by the written margin agreement between you and your broker. Always read that agreement before borrowing on margin.
Not a guarantee of margin call price. The margin-call trigger price calculated here is a mathematical approximation using standard Reg T formulas. Brokers may apply special maintenance requirements on individual securities, concentrated positions, or leveraged ETFs that differ from the general formula — and may issue calls above the standard trigger price.
Not a real-time risk monitor. This tool uses static inputs. It does not monitor your live account equity, intraday price movements, or real-time margin availability. Portfolio values can change rapidly intraday — including during extended trading hours — and a margin call can be issued and executed before end-of-day prices are published.
Not tax advice. References to margin interest deductibility are general summaries of IRS Publication 550 as of the current tax year. Your specific deductibility depends on your total net investment income, filing status, account type, and how borrowed proceeds were used. Consult a licensed CPA or tax professional before claiming any deduction.
Not applicable to all account types. Margin borrowing is not available in IRA, Roth IRA, custodial (UTMA/UGMA), or most retirement accounts. The calculations in this tool apply exclusively to taxable, non-retirement margin accounts subject to FINRA Regulation T rules.
Past performance does not guarantee future results. Expected return assumptions you enter are forward-looking estimates. Leveraged positions can result in losses that exceed your original equity investment. Margin calls can force involuntary liquidation at the worst possible prices without advance notice or consent.
Important: Margin trading involves significant risk of loss and is not appropriate for all investors. This tool is designed to help you understand the math of margin borrowing — not to replace professional brokerage guidance, risk management oversight, or the regulatory protections governed by FINRA, the SEC, and the Federal Reserve.
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Editorial Transparency — How Every Calculation Works

Every output in this tool is computed using the formulas listed below — derived from standard US margin lending conventions and FINRA/SEC regulatory standards. No proprietary black-box logic is used.

Daily Interest Accrual
Balance × (Annual Rate ÷ Accrual Basis)
Accrual basis is either 360 or 365 days — confirm with your broker’s margin agreement. Interest accrues 7 days a week including weekends and holidays.
Holding Period Interest Cost
Daily Interest × Number of Days Held
Represents the total accrued interest for a specific borrowing period. Does not include any compounding — margin interest typically does not compound unless unpaid balances roll into the next period.
Annual Interest Cost
Loan Balance × Annual Margin Rate
Annualized dollar cost of the margin loan at the entered rate. Used to calculate the break-even return and net spread metrics.
Account Equity Ratio
(Market Value − Loan Balance) ÷ Market Value × 100
Represents what percentage of the total portfolio value is actually owned by the investor (equity). Compared against initial margin and maintenance margin thresholds to assess call risk.
Margin-Call Trigger Price
Loan Balance ÷ (1 − Maintenance Margin %)
The portfolio value at which account equity equals exactly the maintenance margin requirement. Below this value, the broker may issue a margin call. This is a Reg T standard formula — individual securities may have higher house requirements.
Safety Buffer (Dollars)
Current Market Value − Margin-Call Trigger Price
The dollar cushion between current portfolio value and the margin-call price. Compared against the user-defined minimum equity buffer percentage to flag whether the buffer is sufficient for the position’s volatility.
Break-Even Return
Annual Interest Cost ÷ Portfolio Market Value × 100
The minimum annual portfolio return required to cover the full cost of margin borrowing. A pre-tax calculation — users should adjust upward by their marginal capital gains rate for a true after-tax break-even.
Net Spread
Expected Annual Return − Break-Even Return
The net return above (or below) the cost of leverage. A positive spread means borrowing is adding return above its cost. A negative spread means the loan is destroying value regardless of market direction.
Broker Comparison Savings
(Your Current Rate − Lowest Broker Rate) × Loan Balance
Annual dollar saving from switching to the cheapest broker entered. Calculated for the same loan balance and holding period — making the rate difference tangible in dollar terms rather than basis points.
Stress-Drop Margin Call Test
Post-stress Market Value = Market Value × (1 − Stress Drop %)
Applies the entered volatility stress drop to the current portfolio value to simulate a market correction. The resulting equity ratio is compared against the maintenance margin — a fail means the stress scenario triggers a margin call.
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No data storage. All calculations run entirely in your browser using client-side JavaScript. No inputs, results, or portfolio values are transmitted to any server, database, or third party.
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No broker affiliations. Broker names and rates in the comparison layer are entered freely by the user — they are not pre-populated through any commercial relationship, affiliate agreement, or sponsored placement with any brokerage firm.
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No advertising influence. Results, verdicts, and recommendations are generated purely from the mathematical formulas described above. No advertiser, sponsor, or affiliate relationship influences the outputs of this calculator.
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Formula basis. All margin calculations use standard US Regulation T and FINRA Rule 4210 mechanics — the same methodology applied by broker-dealers regulated by FINRA and the SEC.
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Authoritative Government & Regulatory References

The calculations, warnings, and educational content in this tool are grounded in the following primary US government and regulatory sources. These links open official .gov or .finra.org pages — no affiliate or commercial relationship exists with any of the organizations below.

📐 Margin Regulation & Broker Rules
💰 Interest, Tax & Deductibility
🛡️ Investor Protection & Education